Collecting student assignments and digital files - Classroom 2.02024-03-29T06:07:04Zhttps://www.classroom20.com/forum/topics/collecting-student-assignments-and-digital-files?commentId=649749%3AComment%3A736225&feed=yes&xn_auth=noThis school year we have crea…tag:www.classroom20.com,2011-09-15:649749:Comment:7463932011-09-15T00:49:24.801ZMatt Simmonshttps://www.classroom20.com/profile/MattSimmons
<p>This school year we have created individual network accounts for students in our junior-senior high school. I have recently received a couple of legitimate requests from teachers regarding shared file storage for students in their classes. I have a limited tech staff and budget. I'm not really interested in housing student files on our servers. I want to take things a step further and provide online file storage so faculty and staff have access to there files from any computer with an…</p>
<p>This school year we have created individual network accounts for students in our junior-senior high school. I have recently received a couple of legitimate requests from teachers regarding shared file storage for students in their classes. I have a limited tech staff and budget. I'm not really interested in housing student files on our servers. I want to take things a step further and provide online file storage so faculty and staff have access to there files from any computer with an Internet connection. I'm trying to look at the "Big Picture" here. I want to provide maximum features and functionality without it being overly confusing.</p>
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<p>I have been planning on providing Google Apps accounts for faculty and students, minus the email functionality. My district isn't prepared to provide email accounts to students. I like Google Apps because it provides word processing, spreadsheet, and presentation tools to students at no cost. It also provides file storage. However, I'm concerned about the limited amount of storage space available. We have some jounalism, digital arts, and engineering classes that can generate very large files.</p>
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<p>Taking things another step, I thought it would be useful to find a way to provide large amounts of online file storage for those specialized classes. Due to the limited tech staff, the solution has to have little overhead involved in setting up access.</p>
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<p>I have been considering a network attached storage device for these particular classes to use. Many now have web access capabilities. Another option I'm considering is a service that not only provides unlimited files storage, but also drop boxes for teachers, message boards, blogs, calendars, etc. Services I'm looking at are from SchoolWebLockers.com and eBackpack.com . Both are similar services that cost $1 per user per year.</p>
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<p>I'm just curious to see if anyone else has explored online file storage for faculty and students. Has anyone used SchoolWebLockers.com or eBackpack.com?</p>
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<p>I appreciate any input that folks can provide.</p> Yes. It's so handy. On the du…tag:www.classroom20.com,2011-09-05:649749:Comment:7362252011-09-05T16:35:13.758ZGarrison Dailyhttps://www.classroom20.com/profile/GarrisonDaily
<p>Yes. It's so handy. On the due date, I open it up and grade it ... ready or not. This has been a wonderful lesson to them about hitting deadlines.</p>
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<p>The elementary kids are too young for Google, unless your district gets in on Google Apps for Ed. We're trying to get our district to move on this right now. It's like running through jello.</p>
<p>Yes. It's so handy. On the due date, I open it up and grade it ... ready or not. This has been a wonderful lesson to them about hitting deadlines.</p>
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<p>The elementary kids are too young for Google, unless your district gets in on Google Apps for Ed. We're trying to get our district to move on this right now. It's like running through jello.</p> I am an avid gmail user and I…tag:www.classroom20.com,2011-09-05:649749:Comment:7364752011-09-05T06:25:57.917ZSteve Leehttps://www.classroom20.com/profile/SteveLee
<p>I am an avid gmail user and I like google sites. I teach elementary school computer class and I have to get signed permissions for the kids to have email accounts and that's an issue I have to weigh very carefully. I know that a great deal of my students have many forms of email, facebook, twitter, youtube accounts and more, but I am cautious about the teacher / student interaction dynamic there.</p>
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<p>When you say your kids have gmail accounts and can share work with you, I…</p>
<p>I am an avid gmail user and I like google sites. I teach elementary school computer class and I have to get signed permissions for the kids to have email accounts and that's an issue I have to weigh very carefully. I know that a great deal of my students have many forms of email, facebook, twitter, youtube accounts and more, but I am cautious about the teacher / student interaction dynamic there.</p>
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<p>When you say your kids have gmail accounts and can share work with you, I assume you mean through google docs and sharing?</p> Steve,
This sounds great. I,…tag:www.classroom20.com,2011-09-04:649749:Comment:7355632011-09-04T21:53:35.585ZGarrison Dailyhttps://www.classroom20.com/profile/GarrisonDaily
Steve,<br />
This sounds great. I, however, am a Google freak. My older kids have Gmail accounts and can share their work with me without having to attach them to emails. Also, I don't have to download file after file. The younger ones still email their small files from their Gaggle accounts. It is limited, but that's fine for their needs. I've found that these plans are even easier than our in-house dropbox on the desktops. I can grade from anywhere, any time.
Steve,<br />
This sounds great. I, however, am a Google freak. My older kids have Gmail accounts and can share their work with me without having to attach them to emails. Also, I don't have to download file after file. The younger ones still email their small files from their Gaggle accounts. It is limited, but that's fine for their needs. I've found that these plans are even easier than our in-house dropbox on the desktops. I can grade from anywhere, any time.